Brian Wilson's SMiLE: The DVD (2005)

Good Vibrations

By Jeffrey M. Anderson

Once upon a time, the Beach Boys were an amusing pop group
with jaunty, sing-a-long radio songs. But then their leader, Brian Wilson,
decided that something more was possible, and so created the album Pet
Sounds (1966), a complex symphony-like
masterpiece full of criss-crossing, stunningly complimentary sounds and
soul-searching beauty.

At the same time, the Beatles were also experimenting with
the possibilities of pop records, and each group spurred the other to greater
heights. After the Beatles responded to Pet Sounds with Revolver, Brian Wilson vowed to achieve the ultimate record with SMiLE.

Of course, SMiLE was
never finished. It has become something of a legend among unreleased works.
Bootleg tapes and CDs have changed hands for years, and generations of fans
have speculated as to what the finished album might have sounded like. Wilson
went through a very tough time, succumbing to all kinds of personal problems
relating to drugs, depression and bad company. In 1995, he remarried and his
new wife set him on the road to recovery. At the same time, a feature
documentary, I Just Wasn't Made for These Times, told Wilson's life story to a new generation of
fans. Finally, in 2004, Wilson completed SMiLE for a London concert and followed it with an
official CD release. It's every bit the masterpiece that it always should have
been.

Now Rhino has released a two-disc DVD companion piece. Disc
One begins with the feature length documentary Beautiful Dreamer, which interviews Wilson and SMiLE lyricist Van Dyke Parks as well as Elvis Costello,
Jeff Bridges, Rob Reiner and Roger Daltry. Beautiful Dreamer is a fine effort, but it feels a little too
reverently official and not quite as revealing as I Just Wasn't Made
for These Times.

Disc One also includes the London performance footage of
"Mrs. O'Leary's Cow," interviews with people who attended the London
show, and interviews with Wilson and Parks. The audio is available in 5.1, 2.0
or with score only.

Disc Two however, features the 52-minute live performance
shot live over a single evening in Los Angeles, and it's utterly breathtaking.
The sound and energy of the performance is even better than the studio-recorded
CD. I came close to tears a few times. Brian's face during the performance is a
thing to behold; you can almost watch his fear melt away into joy. Extras on
this disc include "Brian at the piano," a photo gallery, a 20-minute
"making of" featurette about the album, and a terrific animated
"Heroes and Villains" contest winner video.